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Hi, everyone. I'm making some changes to one of my 1B assignments and
have decided to ask each of my students write about a film based on a
controversial issue (could be a current issue or a perennial/universal
one). I plan to have students choose from a list that I am compiling. I
have done a bit of research to find appropriate films but don't really
have time to pursue it further, and I need to finish the handout by
Monday night so that I can distribute it in class next Tuesday (January
22). I'm also hoping that I can rent a few titles over the weekend and
watch them at home before I finalize the movie list.<br>
<br>
I'm looking for "fictional" movies, not documentaries, and I want to
stay away from docudramas and made-for-TV fare. I would also like to
avoid David-and-Goliath films like <i>Eric Brockovich</i>. I would
like a nice mix of films that focus primarily on the controversial
issue and films that use a controversial issue mainly as a starting
point. Popular films are fine. The idea is for students to write a
focused movie review, evaluating the usual stuff (plot, acting, special
effects, casting, etc.) but spending a significant portion of the paper
on evaluating how the controversial issue functions, what it
contributes to the film, stuff like that.<br>
<br>
Anyone have any good ideas? I'll take all the help I can get. I only
have a few movies that I'm sure I'll use, and I have a long list of
films that I'm still thinking about. Many are science fiction; I
suppose that's predictable since I'm an sf buff, but I guess I could
use some breadth. <br>
<br>
Here are the movies I'm sure I'll use:<br>
Citizen Ruth<br>
Gattaca<br>
John Q<br>
Mimic<br>
Saved!<br>
<br>
Here are films that I'm still thinking about:<br>
Jurassic Park (too basic?)<br>
Priest (too controversial?)<br>
AI: Artificial Intelligence (gets pretty schmaltzy, esp. at the
end...and I'm not sure it's appropriate)<br>
Soylent Green (really old, from my students' perspective)<br>
Minority Report (not sure about this one--haven't seen it in awhile)<br>
The Good Shepherd, or Breach (again, both are pretty heavy for
eighteen-year-olds but pose interesting issues/questions)<br>
I would love to assign Children of Men, but I'm not sure it's
appropriate.<br>
I like Planet of the Apes (1969) because it poses interesting questions
about race and about defining humanity. What do you think?<br>
<br>
Here are films I've never seen but that sound promising:<br>
Million Dollar Baby (might be rather heavy for freshmen; what do you
think?)<br>
Losing Isaiah (too old? and I barely know what it's about)<br>
Runaway Jury (I read some blurbs about it)<br>
Monster<br>
The Life of David Gale<br>
Miss Evers' Boys (is this a David-and-Goliath picture?)<br>
<br>
Thanks in advance,<br>
Benedict Jones<br>
<br>
<br>
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